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The Great Escape: A Gender Identity Switch Story
The Great Escape: A Gender Identity Switch Story
The Great Escape: A Gender Identity Switch Story
Ebook129 pages1 hour

The Great Escape: A Gender Identity Switch Story

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Story set in Brtitish Raj India. A husband and wife swap identities to avoid the husband getting into trouble. Things go rough for the couple but they tide along in their crossdressed identities.

This story is also called 'Family Secret'.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherEx-q-zit
Release dateNov 26, 2017
ISBN9781370580415
The Great Escape: A Gender Identity Switch Story
Author

Ex-q-zit

I have wriiten books based on crossdressing, gender role reversal and forced feminisation.

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    The Great Escape - Ex-q-zit

    The Great Escape

    A Gender Identity Switch Story

    The Great Escape

    By EX-Q-ZIT

    Copyright 2017 by EX-Q-ZIT

    Smashwords Edition

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    This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This eBook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    FAMILY SECRET

    CHAPTER 1 – THE MYSTERY BEGINS

    Mr. Ram Mohan sat down on the couch in the hall. He had come to his ancestral house in Chennai on the death of his mother Radha Devi. Ram was around 65 years old. He had retired a few years back after working in Bangalore for a couple of decades and returned back to Chennai along with his wife to stay with his old parents. For some strange reason his parents never felt comfortable moving out of Chennai. His father Radha Krishna Naidu had died 6 months earlier and his mother a week back.

    He was staring at the small trunk box in front of him. His mother has told him to open the box which was placed in the attic, only after her death and that too when no one was around. Ram wondered what was in the box and why his mother asked him to only open after her death. He was most perplexed because before their death both his parents had made a strange request that they should be cremated in the clothes they were wearing and not changed.

    Ram’s wife had gone to Bangalore to be with their daughter as she was 7 weeks pregnant. So this was the right time to open the box. His hands trembled as he opened the old 90 year old chest. In the chest was a large envelope and also a dairy. There were also a few family jewels in it. But Ram’s interest was on the envelope and dairy.

    He first opened the envelope and as he tried to draw out the contents I it a few old photographs fell out of it. He carefully lifted them so as to not damage them. The first was of a young man in his twenties. He did not recognize who it was, the person seemed to be in his teens and wore a suit and tie. The year seemed to be 1944. Ram felt a bit uncomfortable looking at the picture but he could not pin point as to why. The face seemed familiar but he could not relate it with anybody he knew.

    The next photo was of a girl also in her teens who was dressed to the nines in a beautiful saree. Saree neatly pleated and hair braided and made into a bun with flowers around it, the girl looked like a picture of sophistication. She was also familiar. Ram had never seen both these people ever in his life.

    After drawing a blank when trying to remember who they were he turned to another photo. He could identify the people in this. They were his parents. It was written behind the photo as just married and dated as 1947. Ram was confused as he was born in the year 1946. So does it mean I was born before them getting married? He thought. While Dad looked handsome in his pin striped darkish suit Mom looked as beautiful as ever well draped saree. But there seemed to be some sort of defeat in her face.

    The next photo had two women and a child. One of them was his mother and the other her friend Manikyamma. The child was his younger sister Renuka. The year was 1953. Finally the last picture dated 1948 was again of two women. One of them being his mother and the other was the same woman whom Ram had failed to identify earlier. Ram felt certain unease as he looked at the picture. It was a picture of two women posing for a camera but something about seemed to be wrong.

    Ram now opened the diary and noticed the handwriting as his mother’s. He started reading it.

    CHAPTER 2 – THE CONVICT ESCAPES

    Ram began reading the diary with keen interest.

    I always felt Devi and myself were destined to be with each other. Our parents had decided that we both would be married to each other when we were just toddlers. Although child marriage was a common practice those days my father-in-law decided that Radha need to completed her matriculation and only then would the marriage take place. But I never showed any interest in my studies and moved about as a vagabond. Radha tried to convince me that I need to mend my ways but in vain. she insisted that we could never be married unless I was prepared to forego my wild ways and settle down at a respectable job. Perhaps that might have happened in time, but fate took a hand in our destiny.

    She must have been writing this for my father thought Ram. The words indicated that it was about his father but the handwriting was his mother’s. He was

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